Abstract

BamA, the core component of the β-barrel assembly machinery (BAM) complex, is an outer-membrane protein (OMP) in Gram-negative bacteria. Its function is to insert and fold substrate OMPs into the outer membrane (OM). Evidence suggests that BamA follows the asymmetric hybrid-barrel model where the first and last strands of BamA separate, a process known as lateral gate opening, to allow nascent substrate OMP β-strands to sequentially insert and fold through β-augmentation. Recently, multiple lead compounds that interfere with BamA's function have been identified. We modeled and then docked one of these compounds into either the extracellular loops of BamA or the open lateral gate. With the compound docked in the loops, we found that the lateral gate remains closed during 5 μs molecular dynamics simulations. The same compound when docked in the open lateral gate stays bound to the β16 strand of BamA during the simulation, which would prevent substrate OMP folding. In addition, we simulated mutants of BamA that are resistant to one or more of the identified lead compounds. In these simulations, we observed a differing degree and/or frequency of opening of BamA's lateral gate compared to BamA-apo, suggesting that the mutations grant resistance by altering the dynamics at the gate. We conclude that the compounds act by inhibiting BamA lateral gate opening and/or binding of substrate, thus preventing subsequent OMP folding and insertion.

Full Text
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